Pages

Monday, 10 November 2014

I was asked to create a cake by Brides Magazine to be part of a competition. The lucky couple will win a wedding cake in a design of their choice made by yours truly.

To advertise the competition I was asked to create a cake jam packed with details and illustrations. So I imagined the type of bride who loves Pinterest, and has a wedding scrapbook. Someone who has lots and lots of ideas about the details of the big day...

From the car to the buttonholes to the church.

I even added a cake!

I wanted the back and the sides of the cake to contain just as much detail as the front.

Tuesday, 16 September 2014

I am very excited, in fact I am throbbing with excitement! Australia...I am coming to get you! Well I'm coming to visit you on a small teaching tour. And the second reason that I am excited is that this tour is going to coincide with my book being launched in Australia. (I'm afraid that the UK and USA are going to have to wait for March for that one!)

Anyway if you fancy popping along, saying hello and learning how to paint onto fondant. Here are the details;

Tuesday, 19 August 2014

When I was a child my parents took me on numerous holidays to Holland. My Mum's best friend lived there and we took advantage of her extra beds to explore the Lowlands. We frolicked in the waves of Bergen Aan Zee, buried my Dad in the sand, ate chips with mayonnaise (very exotic) and when we were tired out, we traipsed up to the cafe on stilts for a hot chocolate. I always found it very exciting that not only did the hot chocolate arrive with lashings of whipped cream (and the proper stuff, not squirted from a can) but nestling on one side of the cup would be a little red plastic packet. Gingerly tearing it open, I would immediately be assailed with the overwhelming fragrance of speculaas. This ever-so-foreign mix of spices had a taste that as a child of the 70's growing up in England I just couldn't place. It was so much more than cinnamon, and not at all like the traditional gingerbread flavours that I was more used to, it was the taste of holidays.

I wanted to create a biscuit that would take me back to those childhood days in Holland so I used this method to create my own molds. I made small rectangular mold with pretty detailing, just like the original biscuits of my childhood.

Recipe

Ingredients:

90g light brown sugar

3 tablespoons golden syrup

4 teaspoons speculaas spice

1 teaspoon vanilla extract

pinch of salt

100g unsalted butter

1/2 teaspoon bicarb of soda

225g plain flour

Method:

Place the sugar, syrup, spice, vanilla and salt in a pan and bring to the boil, take the pan off the heat.

Add the butter and stir until melted.

Dissolve the bicarb with a tablespoon of water and add it to the pan mix.

Pour the mix into a bowl and add the flour.

Stir together until you have formed a dough.

Wrap the dough in kitchen film and chill for at least an hour.

Roll out the dough to a thickness of 2mm, cut out the same rectangular shape that you used for the mold and press into the mold.

Place the biscuits on a baking tray covered with baking paper and chill for half an hour.

Friday, 8 August 2014

Some time ago, whilst bimbling around Pinterest, I happened upon this recipe. Now if you are in anyway like me, you probably pin many many sticky toffee-ish syle baked goods, and you probably do no more that just look at them salivating. I decided to be a bit more proactive with this particular recipe and make it. Since then I have made it around six or seven times, and for couple of those times I even shared the goodies with friends and family. Their reactions were initially 'mmm....mmmm....mmmmmm!', closely followed by 'where can I get the recipe?'

I have to warn you before you embark on baking these blondies yourself - they are like crack! You cannot stop eating them, so make sure you have a good crowd coming over to help you, or you may find yourself slipping in to a diabetic coma.

I have tweaked the initial recipe a little (mostly to add more caramel!) You will find that you are left with half a pot of the caramel sauce, but hey that's no tragedy right?

Recipe

To make the caramel sauce, put the water in the pan first, then add the sugar. Place the pan on a low to medium heat until the sugar has dissolved. DO NOT STIR!!! If you stir it the syrup will turn crumbly and fudgey. If you want to you can swirl the water and sugar around the pan a few times. When the sugar has dissolved turn the heat up and boil rapidly until the syrup turns a darkish golden brown. Take the pan off the heat and add the cream. You may find it bubbles up a bit so be careful. If you find that the caramel is a bit lumpy then return it to the heat and stir until smooth, add the salt and stir in well. Leave the caramel to cool slightly,

Preheat the oven to 175 C. Lin a 9" square tin. Beat together the butter and the sugars. Beat in the eggs and vanilla.

Fold in the flour, baking powder and salt. Add half the dough to the tin, and smooth it over with a palette knife,

Pour in enough of the caramel to cover the dough but leave a 2cm gap around the edge. Add the remaining dough, I find it helpful to add it in small spoonfuls over the surface of the caramel.

Smooth over the surface and then scatter a pinch of sea salt over the top of the dough. Bake for 30 mins until the top is golden and a skewer inserted into the middle comes out clean. Leave the blondies to cool down in the tin, then place the tin in the fridge for an hour, before cutting into pieces. Eat until you pass out!

I hope that you find these blondies as delicious as I do. You can download a printable version of the recipe here.